Yet another CNS video with SSPX Bp. Fellay

In another entry I posted videos from Catholic News Service of interviews with SSPX Bp. Fellay.

Yet another!

These are “extras”, that is, short comments they did not have in other videos.

What is so amazing about these videos is that they would have been unthinkable – from CNS – even a couple years ago!

How times are changing.

[wp_youtube]1OZz7NrXssQ[/wp_youtube]

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, SSPX, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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A deacon responds to a gushy women’s ordination propaganda piece in a secular newspaper

A while back there was a dippy filmette about wymynprysts “Pink Smoke Over the Vatican” inspired by an equally dippy column in the Bakersfield Californian by one Valerie Schultz, a board member of CSUB’s Institute for Religion, Education, and Public Policy (IREPP) and a columnist for the Bakersfield Californian.  I had seen Schultz’s original column, but considered it too loopy for your time and my effort.

However, a permanent deacon in Bakersfield has responded in the paper. His column can give you some pointers about how to respond to this fantasy that the Church can change her “policy” about the impossibility of the ordination of women.

ANOTHER VIEW: Schultz blowing pink smoke in describing female ordination
By DANIEL RINDGE

A presentation by the Institute for Religion, Education, and Public Policy at Cal State Bakersfield of the film, “Pink Smoke Over the Vatican,” inspired Valerie Schultz’s May 19 column, “Film documents battle for women to be priests.” [Which, we know, is a pointless battle, just as it is a pointless battle for a screaming bratty little girl to resist her father’s hands when he pulls her away from the table saw.] This headline is misleading because the matter of women’s ordination has long been settled within the Roman Catholic Church — priestly ordination is reserved to men alone. As has occurred throughout its history, the church continues to clarify its teachings when contemporary circumstances dictate. Because of dissenting voices within the church in our own time, Pope John Paul II felt it necessary to state, yet again, [Good.  His document wasn’t exactly stating something novel.] the church’s teaching in regard to priestly ordination in his apostolic letter “Ordinatio Sacerdotalis,” issued May 22, 1994.

What is so disheartening about Schultz’s article [Other than how badly written it was…] is the context in which it was written. She is writing as a board member of CSUB’s Institute for Religion, Education, and Public Policy (IREPP), an organization with the self-described mission to “advance knowledge and understanding of the varied roles religious movements, institutions, and ideas play in the contemporary world; explore challenges posed by religious pluralism and tensions between religious and secular values; and examine the influence of religion on politics, civic culture, family life, gender roles, and other issues locally, nationally, and globally.” However, her column indicates she and the IREPP are instead using CSUB’s resources to disparage and condemn a key aspect of Catholic theology.

Schultz’s comments about the “patriarchal wind that has long blown from Rome[I think she meant “chilling patriarch wind”.] or Pope Benedict XVI’s use of the “global pulpit” [Imagine the gall of that Pope!  Using his global pulpit to teach what the Church teaches…. sheesh.  Shameless.] reveals her personal disdain for innate aspects of Catholicism itself. She quotes Galatians 3:28 as a scriptural support of her position regarding ordination, yet that piece of Scripture speaks not to ordination but to the universal salvation of all — irrespective of all human divisions. [So, she is also either dumb or a little dodgy.] She fails to understand why Father Bourgeois, a priest interviewed in the film, was excommunicated and dismissed from his order due to “his refusal to recant his public support of women priests.”  [I just want to be sure… did that actually happen?  Is that resolved now?]

One has to question the credentials of any IREPP board member who fails to understand why a Catholic priest should be dismissed when he leads others away from the faith he had vowed to profess. Moreover, Schultz’s journalistic integrity is called into question when she presents Juanita Cordero as “an ordained Roman Catholic woman priest” who was “ordained in 2007.” This is factually false and a misrepresentation of Roman Catholic ordinations. [Exactly. The press nearly always just takes the bait and calls these gals “priests” and says that they were “ordained”.] Rather than clarify why Cordero considers herself “ordained,” Schultz presents this as a fact to readers of The Californian.

As a CSUB alumnus and Bakersfield resident, it frustrates me to see such a forum supported by my university. As a deacon ordained in the Roman Catholic Church, it saddens me to see the Catholic expression of Christianity misrepresented in the name of “higher education” by a fellow Catholic who continues to publicly denounce essential tenets of the faith in The Californian. This IREPP event did not foster an understanding of Catholicism and how its practice influences society. Instead, it sowed confusion within the general public’s understanding of this particular tenet of the Catholic faith. [Which seems to be at odds with the mission of that organization as well as a news source.]

The smoke in Schultz’s article may be pink, but it is still just part of the smoke and mirrors used to deceive the uninformed.  [Let’s put this another way.  Paul VI said in 1972 that the “smoke of Satan” has entered the Church through some crack.  That pinkish smoke is header out of the Church.]

Deacon Daniel Rindge of Christ the King Catholic Church in Oildale received his Bachelor of Public Administration from Cal State Bakersfield, graduating magna cum laude. Another View presents a critical response to a previous editorial, column or news story.

WDTPRS kudos to Rev. Mr. Rindge.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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QUAERITUR: If we have to agree with Vatican II do we have to agree with Communion in the hand, altar girls, EMHCs, etc?

From a reader:

I’m wondering what type of assent are we as Catholics supposed to give
to the Vatican II council? Also do we have an obligation to agree with
things like Communion in the hand, and other parts in the liturgy that
are special permissions (use of EMHCs, female altar servers, etc)? I’m
not sure if they came from Vatican II or not but I heard they came
later.

The things you mention are not from any of the documents of Vatican II. They are innovations that were imposed by liberals in the name of Vatican II. Altar girls and Communion in the hand are, today, licit, but they developed against the Church’s clear laws at the time. They obtained approval after the fact.

I am sure the readership here will have nothing else to say and will have no additional comments or opinions.

I will now back out of the room.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged , , , ,
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Fr. Sirico (about new book) interviewed by Stuart Varney – fun!

I wrote about Fr. Sirico’s new book HERE.

Fr. Sirico had a great interview on Stuart Varney’s show on Fox Business Network.

You should enjoy this.

From Stuart Varney’s show on FNC:

Posted in Linking Back, Religious Liberty | Tagged , , ,
7 Comments

SCHOLION: The three phases of temptation

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I have an obligation as an Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist to remind (or in many cases teach) you about something before the big Memorial Day (PENTECOST) weekend.

The manualist I sometimes cite, Fr. Adolphe Tanquerey, writes about temptation in The Spiritual Life. (Great, clear book.  He doesn’t fool around.  UK link HERE.)

I found a brief exposition of temptation, citing Tanquerey and Augustine, in the new Manual of Minor Exorcisms:

The moral theologian Adolfe Tanquerey quotes the teaching of St Augustine to explain the three phases of temptation – suggestion, pleasure and consent.

He says, “Suggestion consists in the proposal to some evil.  Our imagination or our mind represents to us in a more or less vivid manner the attaction of the forbidden fruit.”

Then he describes how pleasure follows the suggestion: “Instinctively our lower tendencies are drawn towards the suggested evil and a certain pleasure is experienced.”

He adds, “this pleasure does not, as long as the will refuses to consent to it, constitute a sin.”

But then explains, “If on the contrary, the will delights in the pleasure, willingly enjoys it and consents to it, the sin is committed.”

Read.  Ponder.  Commit to memory.  Teach to children.  Remember when examining your conscience.

And don’t forget to GO TO CONFESSION.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Four Last Things, GO TO CONFESSION, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , ,
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QUAERITUR: A new priest fulfilling a promise for his first three Masses of thanksgiving.

From a son-to-be ordained deacon:

Many years ago, as I was beginning in seminary, I made a private vow to the Blessed Virgin that I would offer the first liturgically free Mass in her honor if she would help me to persevere to priestly ordination. She has admirably answered my prayer and now it will soon be time to uphold my end. However, since I am to be ordained on the 26th of May, [A fine day to be ordained!] the Monday will not be liturgically free for a IV class Votive Mass of the BVM (obviously, Sunday is not). So, the question is, how would you recommend that I fulfill this vow? Is there some exception of which I am unaware for the new priest’s first three Masses (which are meant to be said for special intentions: thanksgiving, in honor of the BVM, and for the dead (of the family), right?)?

It would be my strong desire to fulfill this vow in the extraordinary form. However, if it is simply impossible in the EF, ought I then to do so in the OF on Monday, which would indeed be free.

There is indeed a tradition for a new priest to say votive Masses in the manner you mention.  I have heard different versions.  But I warmly approve of a votive Mass of the Blessed Virgin, especially given your promise.

First, you said that you said “first liturgically free Mass in her honor”.  Therefore, I am not sure what the problem is.  You are free to wait for a day that you know, for sure, is free!

However, if you want it on a certain date because of circumstances (family is still around, choir is available) you can always ask the local bishop for permission… if, that is, the bishop would not look askance at such a request and, therefore you.  He will probably be benign (and slightly amused) and paternal.

Otherwise, given the particular situation (and few situations would be more particular given that priests are usually ordained only once) and that you are talking about ad hoc Masses, I think you could just do it anyway.  These matters of the calendar are, I believe, pretty flexible.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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The Vatican Document Leaks – The Butler Did it!?

From the intrepid Andrea Tornielli of La Stampa:

05/25/2012
Vatican announces it has caught poison pen letter writer

The culprit is allegedly the Pope’s butler, a layman. But doubts are growing in the Holy See
ANDREA TORNIELLI
vatican city

The Vatican Gendarmerie’s inquiry into the publication of secret documents “has allowed us to identify one person in possession of confidential documents.” Fr. Federico Lombardi stated this, explaining that this person “is now at the Vatican magistrate’s disposal for further questioning.”

The Vatican Gendarmerie, led by general Domenico Giani has allegedly identified the poison pen letter writer, who Italian newspaper Il Foglio has revealed is the Pope’s butler, Paolo Gabriele: a layman working in Benedict XVI’s apartment, who had previously worked in the Pope’s anteroomfor for a number of years. He is currently undergoing a legal process.

The Vatican Gendarmerie found large wad of confidential documents in an apartment in Via di Porta Angelica, in Rome, where the Pope’s butler Paolo Gabriele lives with his wife and three children. This just over 40 year old man from Rome has been working in the Pope’s apartment since 2006, entering the Pope’s Family after a period serving Mgr. James Harvey, Prefect of the Papal Household.

But is he really a poison pen letter writer or just a scapegoat to save the skin of someone higher up? This is the question many in the Vatican are asking since rumours have been spreading regarding the inquiries into the leaked documents. The butler is in fact considered by many in the Holy See as a simple, good person who is devoted to the Pope.

[…]

Well… the upside of this is that the Fishwrap – always focused with that strong sensus fidelium on the really important stuff – will have another thing to have a spittle-flecked nutty over!

Posted in The Drill, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
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REVIEW: Manual of Minor Exorcisms – For the use of Priests (Catholic Truth Society)

I recently received from the UK-based Catholic Truth Society, a copy of their Manual of Minor Exorcisms – For the use of Priests.

And excellent.. excellent… gift for a priest or a transitional deacon about to be ordained (less so for early seminarians and never for lay people, in my opinion).

The US amazon listing is HERE, though it says “out of stock”. The UK amazon site also says “out of stock”.  HERE. Please GO THERE anyway and click the tell publisher you want to see it on KINDLE button.  Please?

The book is small, inside suit coat pocket small, with a ribbon. It was put together in 2010 by Bp. Julian Porteous, auxiliary of Sydney, and is just being released now.

There is a great introduction including a section on

  • The Wiles of the Devil
  • Exposure to the Powers of Darkness
  • Combating the Powers of Darkness
  • Forms of Exorcism
  • The Rite of Exorcism
  • Prayers of Deliverance
  • The Use of Minor Exorcism.

The body of the book contains rites and prayers.  Virtually everything in the book can be used only by priests, though there are a couple prayers that lay people can use.

Before you ask, yes, this book also contains rites and prayers from the older Rituale Romanum!

I was ready to stomp all over this book, until I saw that things from the traditional Rituale Romanum were included, though in English, not in Latin.

The introduction by Bp. Porteous is very good.  He actually believes in the powers of hell and that the devil hates us and that they work for our down fall and that the church and her ministers can do something about it.

I want to caution people, just as Bp. Porteous does in the intro, that there is a rise of prurient interest in dark things, which are often in the media protrayed in a seductively romantic way, that is, an attractive way.  This can lead people into the trap of believing a) that these things are really good when they are not, for there has been a long-standing effort to twist what has always been known to be evil into being at least ambiguous if not just another way of being “good”, and b) attracting the attention of the enemy by too much interest in these dark things.

Never forget that the enemy is angelic.  They are fallen angels.  The angelic nature is vastly more powerful than our puny little human nature, even though Our Lord took our nature to His.  Angels are absolute in their goals and relentless in their actions.  They can influence our memory and our appetites, though they cannot control our wills.  They watch us ceaselessly and, with their superior intellects which don’t need to divide and compose, know us in many ways better than we know ourselves.  And the fallen angels, the enemy, hate us hate us hate us and work constantly to help us sin and lose the life of grace in the soul.

Holy Church has Christ’s power to do something about the more serious forms of temptations, obsessions, oppressions, and possessions (as if there were any other kind than serious!), though her ordained priests and bishops and by using rites of deliverance of different levels.

Priests need to know this stuff. Unfortunately, I never heard that any of this is being taught in any seminary anywhere. I could be wrong. I haven’t heard about it.  There are occasionally courses and workshops offered.

Lay people: Develop a healthy fear of this stuff, even as you recognize the gift of the priesthood and Christ’s gift of His own authority to Holy Church.  Use sacramentals.  GO TO CONFESSION.  Make good Communions.  Ask for the priest’s blessing when you meet him.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Four Last Things, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, REVIEWS, The Drill | Tagged , , , ,
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Anglo-Saxon Window Glass Discovered at Glastonbury Abbey

From a reader for your Just Too Cool file:

Anglo-Saxon Window Glass Discovered at Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset)

New research led by the University of Reading has revealed that finds at Glastonbury Abbey provide the earliest archaeological evidence for glass-making in Britain.

Professor Roberta Gilchrist of the university’s archaeology department has re-examined the records of excavations that took place at Glastonbury in the 1950s and 1960s. Glass furnaces recorded in 1955–57 were previously thought to date from before the Norman Conquest, but radiocarbon dating has now revealed that they date to much earlier, roughly to the 680s, and are likely to be associated with a major rebuilding of the abbey undertaken by King Ine of Wessex. We have documentary records of glass-making at York and Wearmouth for the 670s, but Glastonbury provides the earliest and most substantial archaeological evidence for glass-making in Anglo-Saxon Britain.

The extensive remains of five furnaces have been identified, together with fragments of clay crucibles and glass for window glazing and drinking vessels, mainly of vivid blue-green colour. It is likely that specialist glassworkers came from what is now France to work at Glastonbury.

[…] An exhibition at Glastonburg Abbey Museum, ‘From Fire and Earth’, tells the story of the abbey’s pioneering role in medieval crafts and technology, and runs until 16 September 2012.

[…]

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Meanwhile… back in my native place Minnesota…

I hope by now you have watched the Catholic News Service videos about the SSPX.

Meanwhile, in my native place of Minnesota – ground zero for defense of true marriage – comes this!

WARNING! The light reflected from all that gray hair may cause temporary blindness.

[wp_youtube]Wef-gNmfZmQ[/wp_youtube]

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, SSPX, The Drill, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , ,
53 Comments